This mini-review presents recent advances in the regulation of the membrane transbilayer movement (or flip-flop) of diacylglycerol (DAG), a key intermediate in lipid metabolism and a second messenger in lipid-mediated signaling. Despite progresses in lipid biophysics and imaging, little is known about the DAG dynamics across the two leaflets of the plasma membrane in living cells. Previous model membrane studies with DAG analogs demonstrated their fast flip-flop suggesting that DAG is evenly distributed between the two leaflets of the plasma membrane. However, recent molecular dynamics simulations indicate that DAG transbilayer movement depends on the lipid environment surrounding the lipid, i.e. DAG flips more slowly across a more ordered "lipid raft-like" bilayer (enriched in sphingomyelin/cholesterol) than across a more fluid bilayer (composed of unsaturated glycerophospholipids). Furthermore using the yellow fluorescent protein-tagged C1AB domain from protein kinase C-γ (EYFP-C1AB) that selectively binds DAG, we recently proved that the sphingomyelin (SM) content in the plasma membrane outer leaflet regulates DAG transbilayer movement in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells treated with bacterial phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase C. The dose-dependent inhibition of DAG flip-flop by SM could be reproduced in model membranes using fluorescent short chain DAG analog. Regulation of DAG transbilayer movement by the outer leaflet SM content is expected to modify the downstream recruitment of C1-domain containing effectors, thus bringing new insights on the role of DAG dynamics in cell pathophysiology.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biochi.2014.09.014 | DOI Listing |
Biochimie
December 2024
Université Paris-Saclay, CEA, CNRS, Institute for Integrative Biology of the Cell, Gif-sur-Yvette, France. Electronic address:
The maintenance of a diverse and non-homogeneous lipid composition in cell membranes is crucial for a multitude of cellular processes. One important example is transbilayer lipid asymmetry, which refers to a difference in lipid composition between the two leaflets of a cellular membrane. Transbilayer asymmetry is especially pronounced at the plasma membrane, where at resting state, negatively-charged phospholipids such as phosphatidylserine (PS) are almost exclusively restricted to the cytosolic leaflet, whereas sphingolipids are mostly found in the exoplasmic leaflet.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Pharm Bull
June 2024
Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Josai University.
Ceramide (Cer) is synthesized de novo in the bilayer of the endoplasmic reticulum and transported to the cytosolic leaflet of the trans-Golgi apparatus for sphingomyelin (SM) synthesis. As the active site of SM synthase (SMS) is located on the luminal side of the Golgi membrane, Cer translocates to the lumen via transbilayer movement for SM synthesis. However, the mechanism of transbilayer movement is not fully understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Calcium
July 2024
Department of Anesthesiology, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, United States; Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, United States; Department of Biochemistry, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, United States. Electronic address:
Phospholipid scramblases mediate the rapid movement of lipids between membrane leaflets, a key step in establishing and maintaining membrane homeostasis of the membranes of all eukaryotic cells and their organelles. Thus, impairment of lipid scrambling can lead to a variety of pathologies. How scramblases catalyzed the transbilayer movement of lipids remains poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiophys J
December 2023
Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Dresden, Germany. Electronic address:
Studying the role of molecularly distinct lipid species in cell signaling remains challenging due to a scarcity of methods for performing quantitative lipid biochemistry in living cells. We have recently used lipid uncaging to quantify lipid-protein affinities and rates of lipid trans-bilayer movement and turnover in the diacylglycerol signaling pathway. This approach is based on acquiring live-cell dose-response curves requiring light dose titrations and experimental determination of uncaging photoreaction efficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomolecules
July 2023
School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences, Faculty of Science, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2007, Australia.
In respiring mitochondria, the proton gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane is used to drive ATP production. Mitochondrial uncouplers, which are typically weak acid protonophores, can disrupt this process to induce mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis in cancer cells. We have shown that bisaryl urea-based anion transporters can also mediate mitochondrial uncoupling through a novel fatty acid-activated proton transport mechanism, where the bisaryl urea promotes the transbilayer movement of deprotonated fatty acids and proton transport.
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